Tuesday, June 30, 2015

Italy: Rome, Florence, & Venice

During the month of summer term, I didn't take any classes and instead just hung out in Utrecht instead and also took two trips. The first was a weeklong solo trip to Italy!

The first stop was Rome! I loved Rome and thought it was incredible how there were ruins everywhere you went. So much history in one place, and I can't believe people live there and just walk by ancient artifacts on the way to work! It kind of reminded me a bit of Athens since it's the same idea there. I had fun the first day seeing the Vatican Museum (Sistine Chapel is here), the Pantheon, Trevi Fountain (unfortunately under renovation), Spanish Steps, the Vittorio Emmanuel II Monument, the Arch of Constantine, Trajan's Column, a church with the famous "Moses w/ Horns" in it, and much more!
Trajan's Column
Exciting selfie with the Arch of Constantine

Vittorio Emmanuel II Monument
It was suuuuuper hot and humid, so I was basically dying the whole day and took like a billion breaks, but I enjoyed it anyway. I had some gelato and had lots of fun!
I met this really nice girl from Mexico at my hostel, and we got along really well and talked for a long time. We then figured out we happened to have the exact itinerary for the next week, so we were very excited and planned to meet up in the other cities as well.

The next day, we left the hostel in the morning together to go to the Vatican once more to see St. Peter's Basilica and climb the dome (I was too late the day before). It was a very hot day again, and you have to cover up to get inside churches in Italy, so we were quite warm for the time that we pulled on our extra layers, but it was well worth it. We saw Michelangelo's Pieta inside the church, and the view from the dome was really nice.

St. Peter's Basilica...I'm in the Vatican!!!!!
View from the dome of the Basilica
We then split ways and went off to do our own sightseeing. I went to the Borghese Gallery and then to the Colosseum & the Roman Forum.

Colosseum
Inside the Colosseum
I was exhausted and dying of heat after that, so I headed home around dinner time, and my friend Claudia was back as well. We took naps and then went out to find food. After making some instant noodles in the hostel (I somehow always eat instant noodles during my travels...cause it's cheap), we went out to grab a drink together. We walked for a long time, like an hour, from our hostel near the Termini Station all the way past the Pantheon and then further. But we found the nice spot we were looking for -- Campo de' Fiori! It was still very alive even though it was late at night, and we got some drinks and just enjoyed being on the square and being in that atmosphere. Some Italian guys got in a fight because one of them hit a tourist apparently, and then tons of those same guys just suddenly started crying...it was a very confusing but amusing scene.

On our way home after a fun night!

In the morning, I left really early to catch my train to Florence. The view from the train was beautiful. Florence was too! At first, I thought it was a bit overhyped when I got to the city, but after a day of exploring, I was convinced too that Florence is indeed an incredibly beautiful and enchanting city. I hung out there for two days with my unitmate Polly, who happened to be there at the same time as I was. I really enjoyed my time with her since we hadn't really actually gotten to spend that much time together in Utrecht. We saw and climbed the Duomo and the Campanile (sooo many steps for both of them...but the view was worth it in the end!), went inside the Baptistery of St. John and took pictures of the famous Ghiberti's Gates on its exterior wall, visited both the Uffizi Gallery and the Accademia (with Michelangelo's David...it's HUGE and very impressive), took pictures with the Ponte Vecchio (the famous bridge with all these little shophouses on it), saw the Santa Croce Church (which has the tombs of many famous Italians inside, like Michelangelo, Galileo, and Machiavelli), and much more!

Duomo
View from the Campanile

Ponte Vecchio
We also tried some yummy pizza and pasta, and since it's cheaper to take away, we brought it to eat at this great little spot we found on this super expensive street (Via Tornabuoni).

Pizza!!!
We watched the sunset the second night, and it was one of the most beautiful things I'd ever seen. The sun was huge and round and orange, and it slowly set over the view of Florence with the Arno River and all the beautiful bridges passing over it. It was incredible!

Arno River

Polly and me
I also met another American girl in my hostel that night, and we took a night walk to the Piazzale Michelangelo on the other side of the river to see an amazing view of the entire city at night. It was beautiful, and we had a nice time together enjoying the view and listening to the music people were playing everywhere!

View of Florence from Piazzale Michelangelo
I took the train to Venice on my fifth day in Italy, and it was the only day it rained. It wasn't that bad though, but everyone started pulling on their ponchos, haha. It was still warm and humid though, so I stayed in my shorts and t-shirt and just pulled on my sweater to have a hood. Venice was so pretty. I kind of thought all those pictures I'd seen of it were really edited and filtered, but they're not. It really looks like that. The water is really blue-green, and the entire city looks fake. There are gondolas everywhere (super expensive...like more than 100 euros per ride), and the whole city is kind of like a maze.

Gondolas
It's made up of a few islands, and there's canals and bridges EVERYWHERE. The streets are really just alleys, so you can't see anything but the houses and shops on either side of you, and when you reach the end of the street, there may or may not be a bridge or connecting street. Even if there's a bridge, sometimes there's no road when you cross it and it's just a dead end. It's so weird. It's the only city in Europe that I haven't been able to figure out navigation-wise. Usually, after the first day, I kind of have a sense of direction and can mostly walk around without a map, but in Venice, I'd get lost even with a map. It's crazy.

One of many many canals in Venice
The only public transportation are boats (because the streets are way too narrow for any form of transportation besides walking)! I lived on Guidecca, the little island to the south of the main island, so I took boats a lot. I rode it through the main canal too, and it was a nice way to see the city. I saw the Accademia there as well and lots of other famous stuff -- Piazza San Marco (and I went inside the Basilica di San Marco with Claudia), Rialto Bridge, and tons of other churches. It's not a huge city, but it's really nice to just wander around and enjoy the beautiful sights all around.

Grand Canal
Piazza San Marco
Streets of Venice
The first night, I was really hungry after getting back to my hostel, but I was on a pretty small island so there wasn't much open anymore that late. So I went to this little restaurant next to my hostel that was owned by Chinese people, and they spoke to me in Chinese. I talked to them throughout my whole meal, and at the end, they wouldn't even let me pay. They were really nice, and I enjoyed my time with them! I was supposed to meet up with Claudia for lunch the next day at a certain time and place, but before that time even came, we ran into each other!

Claudia and me!

I also ran into two Canadian guys who I'd met at my hostel in Florence there, and then I saw them like 2 or 3 more times that day, haha. It's always weird when you see a familiar face in a foreign country that you don't plan to see, but it's pretty cool! It makes you feel that the world is much smaller than you think! Claudia and I walked around all day together and found this incredible cheap take away pasta place for lunch. They make their pasta completely fresh, and we loved it so much we went back for dinner.

We then went to this park on one side of the island near the water, and it was so weird because it felt like Seattle or something, and we didn't expect those kinds of trees and plants in a place like Venice. It was really nice, and it was cool that if you looked just past the trees, you could see the water and you'd realize that you really were in Venice. We had a really nice talk and then we left to get some gelato! Right when we decided to get some, this crazy wind and rain started but just lasted for a little bit. Pretty much it ended right when we finished our gelato. Cool. But we still enjoyed it. I love the pistachio flavor! After our fun together, it was time for me to go to the airport, so Claudia brought me to my boat station, and we said our goodbyes. It was so nice to meet her and get to know her, and I hope I'll see her again someday!

Rainbow as I left the city
My trip to Italy was everything and more than I'd hoped for, and I had an incredible experience just simply being in Italy and taking in everything, as well as meeting so many wonderful people in my hostels and outside them too. I hope I can go back one day to see more of this beautiful country!

That One Time My Family Visited and We Went to Stockholm

My mom and brother Sam came to visit me just a few days after I got back from the sail trip, and we had the best week ever together! My brother documented the trip really well soooo here's a link to his blog -- read the full scoop here: http://samsonlim.blogspot.com/. I'll just do a quick summary.

Our first beers together!
I met Sam in the Schiphol airport on Wednesday, and we bussed into the city to explore Amsterdam a bit before my mom arrived. We walked around, had a kroket (I miss them already), got some beers, and just enjoyed being together for the first time in nine months. We then headed back to the airport to pick up our mom and then went to an Indonesian restaurant for her belated birthday dinner. It was a nice night of just walking around in the city and Vondelpark and taking pictures before we headed back to the hotel for some rest before we woke up early for our full day of touristy excitement. I had created an itinerary for the whole week, so we had to keep to our schedule, haha.

Cheese tasting
Thursday started with picking up some appelflappen (apple tarts) from a nearby bakery before going to line up for the Anne Frank House. It was super long line even though we got there half an hour before opening time. It was nice chatting with some Americans around us though while we waited for almost two hours. It was worth it though...the museum was very well set up and very powerful. After we left, we bussed to the Van Gogh Museum, which was also a very nice museum. We were quite quick at going through it in order to avoid museum fatigue (it's a real thing), but it was still very enjoyable. Next, we had some döners for lunch and then went to our third and final (and my favorite) museum -- the Rijksmuseum. This was like my fifth time there, but it was still just as good as every other time. Sam had fun seeing the Nightwatch in the beautiful Gallery of Honor, and then we continued walking around the city and enjoying everything and getting some dinner at a nice little cafe.

My favorite museum ever


The next day (Friday), we woke up early to catch our flight to Stockholm!!! We had close family friends there from Spokane, so we were excited to see them and stay with them. We spent about two days there with them, and they were the best hosts. It was so nice to see them again...it was really just the perfect trip! Things we did were:

  • go on a boat ride to see some of the 30,000 islands Stockholm is comprised of
  • eat a traditional Swedish meal of meatballs w/ lingonberry sauce and potatoes (like in Ikea...but yummier)
  • visit the Vasa Museum, a museum about a ship that sank as it left the harbor a really really long time ago...it was a really cool museum, and the ship was humongous
  • enjoy a bbq at our friends' house with other guests from Spokane that they were hosting
  • explore the entire city with our friends
  • have so much fun talking and laughing and simply enjoying being together again with our friends...miss them already! <3
On a smaller island of Stockholm
Market
Swedish meal
Vasa Museum
Gamla Stan (The Old Town)

Beautiful Stockholm 
Waiting for the bus on a very rainy day
Friends!!!
We left for Schiphol again on Sunday morning, and after arriving, we took the train straight to Utrecht. We dropped off their stuff at my unit, and we started walking into town. I always forget how long it takes to walk into town because I always bike, so we all suffered for quite a while from being super hungry...oops. But we eventually got some more döners and then saw all the main sights in the city. We walked through Janskerkhof & Neude Square, saw the Dom, walked along the Oudegracht, etc. I was their tour guide, and Sam says I am very thorough, as in perhaps a bit too thorough. I enjoyed my tour though...hope they did too, hahaha. It was a rainy day but still really nice to walk around. We (meaning Sam) made dinner at home.

Garden of Domkerk
My cute mom
My lame brother
Tea & appelbollen (literally "apple balls"...yum)
Some gourmet cooking in my high class kitchen
We went back out the next day to explore more! It was sunnier that day, and I took them off the main road to visit a windmill! Sam was excited about it, and we took lots of pictures. Utrecht is so beautiful, and we loved both walking around in the busier city center, as well as going around the smaller and quieter streets that were not in the city center. My mom and Sam both agreed with me that Utrecht is much lovelier to be in than Amsterdam. We explored the city more, going into the Dom and stuff, and then had lunch at a cute cafe on Neude that I had been before.

Windmill!!! So Dutch
One of my favorite spots in Utrecht
We had some yummy tostis (grilled cheese sandwiches) and soup and then went to the station to catch a train to the Hague!

Flags of the 12 different provinces of the Netherlands
It was my third time, and I enjoyed showing them the main sights: the Peace Palace, the Noordeinde Palace, the Binnenhof, etc. We saw the Girl with the Pearl Earring in the Mauritshuis and also did some quick shopping at Primark.

Peace Palace (houses the International Criminal Court, etc.)
"Girl with the Pearl Earring" by Jan Vermeer
After a fun day trip there, we went back to Utrecht to have dinner with Cassy at the pancake house on the Oudegracht (the canal). I was really happy they could meet! After dinner, we went to a bar that had been converted from a hidden church, but it was really full, so we just took a quick look inside and left.

Dinner at the pancake house along the Oudegracht with Cassy
The next morning, we woke up early, and we went to the airport together to send them off. I had such a fun time having them visit me and see where I'd been living for the last year!

Sail Trip & other Dutch adventures!

I'm already back in the US, but I'm going to finish these anyways. So after school ended on May 19, I went on a sailing trip with my university to the north of the Netherlands in Friesland! They have some really nice lakes up here, and we stayed at a hostel with a dock just next to it. It was so nice! They speak Friesian in Friesland, which is actually just a different language than Dutch because they can't actually understand each other. But Friesian speakers can also speak Dutch, so they use that as their common language.

We arrived late on a Wednesday night after taking the train for a few hours and then started sailing the next morning. It was beautiful weather and so much fun getting to learn how to sail. We spent lots of time just enjoying the sun and taking turns steering the boat and controlling the main sail. It's kind of a work out to control the jib, the sail in the very front, so the rest of us reluctantly took turns at that too, haha. The next two days were similar to the first. We would eat lunch on little islands and also explored Sneek, the little town nearby. It was really cute and really cool to see because all the houses were built along waterways, so everyone had boats, and it was often more convenient to use these as transportation rather than using bicycles or cars.




We would sail each day from about 10am to 4-5pm and then come back for dinner. After dinner, we'd all play games or just relax in the common room together or play volleyball outside. It was a very relaxing trip. I would say the only stressful parts were during every meal time where there was a constant mad scramble to take everything within sight before it disappeared (coming down to breakfast a few minutes late would likely result in having either no breakfast or no bread left for making a packed lunch). It was a lot of fun still though, and I'm so glad I went! We headed back Sunday afternoon after a morning of chilling and kayaking. It was such a great trip!



Other Dutch adventures I had the last few months:

  • doing the Heineken Experience in Amsterdam with a few other fellow Americans (I must say it's a pretty lame tour until you get your free beers at the end)
  • helping out in the Daktuin (a rooftop garden at one of the main university's nearby campuses)
  • showing around my friend Renee from Seattle
  • going to a Holland v. Spain football (soccer haha) game...hup Holland hup! (Holland won yay!)

  • going to the symphony at the Concertgebouw in Amsterdam with my unitmate Floor
  • celebrating King's Day (the king's birthday!) with my friends all day in Utrecht...and finishing off the night with a healthy McDonald's run with my friend Cassy
  • visiting the Rietveld Schröder House with my unitmate Lara -- it's a really cool modern house right outside my campus that is famous in the world of architecture; the whole upstairs is an open concept space with movable walls that can turn everything into compartmented rooms if wanted...it's pretty cool
  • going to see our school musical, Spring Awakening, and cheering on my unitmate Ben who was one of the main characters!
  • going to Keukenhof (the really famous tulip garden) with two American friends from Spokane!
  • one last trip to the pancake house (YUM) in the forest with my other American exchange friends, Tiffany & Lisa
  • celebrating International Beyoncé Day at Tivoli (a big club/venue in town) with Cassy and Lara...best night everrr!!! I <3 Beyoncé
  • going to the beach near Haarlem with my American friend Lisa, her sister, and Cassy on Lisa's last day!
  • biking to Amsterdam with Cassy for a music festival we went to! Both the biking and the festival were super fun! The biking should've taken 1 hr 45 min according to Google Maps, but we took a bit longer........the scenery along the way was still very nice though :)
  • swimming in a canal in the forest near our campus on a super hot day...so fun!!! We followed that up by coloring in our coloring books in the grass...it was nice
  • going on walks at night with my unitmate Tess (now that it gets dark at like 11pm)
  • staying the night with Cassy at an Airbnb on Texel, one of the five Dutch islands up north -- it's so beautiful, and the beach there is amazing! We brought our bikes and rode around the island along the beach and through the forests...such a lovely last trip!